Pacific Fire Insurance v. Pacific Surety Co.

28 P. 842, 93 Cal. 7, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 512
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1892
DocketNo. 14061
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 28 P. 842 (Pacific Fire Insurance v. Pacific Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Fire Insurance v. Pacific Surety Co., 28 P. 842, 93 Cal. 7, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 512 (Cal. 1892).

Opinion

Garoutte, J.

Plaintiff is a fire insurance company having its office in the city of Yew York. Defendant is a corporation organized for the purpose of issuing indemnifying bonds to employers, guaranteeing the honesty of employees occupying positions of trust. Smith & Moody were the general agents for plaintiff in the state of California, with an office in the city of S.an Francisco. Upon October 21,1885, defendant issued its bond to plaintiff, guaranteeing the payment of all losses suffered by plaintiff through the fraud and dishonesty of its agents, Smith & Moody, and this bond was renewed for the year ending October 31,1887. In March, 1887, Smith & Moody failed in business, and at that time were indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $2,819.25, moneys collected by them as agents of plaintiff, which amount they converted to their own use, and this action is brought to recover from the agents and their surety, the appellant herein, the amount of such defalcation. Judgment went for the plaintiff in the lower court, and this is an appeal by the defendant surety company from the judgment and order denying a new trial.

[10]*10The trial court substantially found, among other matters, that the contract of employment entered into between plaintiff and its agents provided that accounts should be rendered by said agents to the plaintiff in New York by the fifteenth day of each month of the business done during the. preceding month, and the premiums paid over to the company (plaintiff) by the twentieth day of the second month thereafter; that this provision of the contract was ambiguous, but that both parties understood it to mean that the moneys collected for the business of any given month should be paid to plaintiff on or before the twentieth day of the second month thereafter; that the agents made their reports as required by the contract, and until the time of their defalcation remitted*- the sums shown by their statements to be due from sixty to one hundred and twenty days after the end of the month during which said business was so transacted; that the delays in remitting the money resulted in part from the tardiness of subagents to properly collect and remit to them, and in part from their own negligence, but without any wrongful or fraudulent intent on their part, and that said delays were acquiesced in without objection on the part of plaintiff, and treated by both plaintiff and the said agents as a substantial compliance with their agreement in relation to such remittances; that on October 9, 1885, Smith & Moody made written applications to the defendant for a bond of indemnity to the plaintiff against acts of fraud or dishonesty upon their part; that in said applications they answered “No” to the following questions: “Have you ever been in arrears or default in your present or previous employment?” that attached to these applications was an employer’s certificate, signed by-the secretary of plaintiff in its behalf, which stated, “ I have read the foregoing declarations and answers made by Charles E. Moody (A. D. Smith), and believe them to be true. He has been in the employ of the company during one year, and, to the best of my knowledge, has always performed Ms duties in a faithful and satisfactory manner. His [11]*11accounts were last examined on the twenty-first day of October, 1885, and found to be correct in every respect. He is not, to my knowledge, at present in arrears or default.” It appears that the indemnifying bond issued in October, 1885, was in part based upon this employer’s certificate, and the extension of the bond for the second year was based in part upon an employer’s second certificate, containing, substantially, the matters set out in the one of the preceding year. It was provided in the bond that plaintiff should notify the surety company, in writing, properly addressed, of any act of omission or commission on the part of the employees which might involve a loss for which the company is responsible hereunder, as soon as practicable after the occurrence of such act shall have come to the knowledge of the employer.”

It is conceded that plaintiff’s agents defaulted in a large sum of money during the life of the bond given by appellant, but, to defeat a recovery, appellant insists that the evidence establishes the fact that the bond was obtained by reason of false and fraudulent representations made by the plaintiff, and also that after its delivery, plaintiff’s agents were guilty of making many defaults in the settlement of their accounts, to the knowledge of plaintiff, and plaintiff failed and neglected to notify appellant of such facts as required by the provision of the bond hereinbefore set out. There are preliminary objections made by respondent pertaining to the construction to be placed upon the bond, the order of renewal, employer’s certificates, etc., that we will not pause to notice, but will examine the merits of the appeal upon the broad ground as above set forth by appellant.

Was the failure of plaintiff to give notice that Smith & Moody were not making their remittances at the time demanded by the contract a substantial violation of that condition of the bond wherein plaintiff agreed to notify appellant of any act of omission or commission on the part of the employees that might involve a loss for which the company is responsible hereunder ” ?

[12]*12While the plaintiff had notice that- its agents were not forwarding collections at the times required by the provisions of its contract, yet the trial court found said delays resulted in part from the tardiness of subagents to properly collect and remit to said general agents, and in part from the negligence of said general agents, but without any wrongful or fraudulent intent on their part, and that said delays were acquiesced in without objection on the part of plaintiffs officers, and treated by both plaintiff and said agents as a substantial compliance with their agreement in relation to such remittances.” In the face of the facts set out in this finding, it cannot be said that plaintiff was guilty of a violation of the covenant of the bond. Plaintiff considered the acts of its agents a substantial compliance with the terms of the contract; and under the evidence it would seem that, as a careful, prudent business corporation, it was justified in so doing. The explanations and reasons for the delay were entirely consistent with honesty and fair dealing. As a fact, the court found that such delays were occasioned by no wrongful or fraudulent intent of the agents. Under these conditions, there was no act of "omission or commission” upon the part of the agents requiring notice to appellant. This identical provision of a similar bond was construed in the case of Ӕtna Life Ins.Co. v. American Surety Co., 34 Fed. Rep. 298, and the court there said: “ It cannot be supposed that this provision calls upon the employer to notify the defendant of every act of laches, or delay, or inefficiency on the part of the agent which ultimately may create a loss to the employer. It means that the defendant shall be notified of acts which may create a loss for which it is responsible; that is, a loss arising from fraud or dishonesty. It is not necessary to undertake to define affirmatively what kind or class of acts must be communicated, and whether or not the obligation compels the employer to notify the defendant of that kind of conduct of the employee outside of his business which experience has shown may probably result in dishonesty. It is suffi[13]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P. 842, 93 Cal. 7, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-fire-insurance-v-pacific-surety-co-cal-1892.